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471-2004-1-solar ponds, ömer büyükkidik, a. ceylan serhadoðlu, 2004-1, Notas de estudo de Engenharia Química

SOLAR PONDS

Tipologia: Notas de estudo

2016

Compartilhado em 23/11/2016

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Baixe 471-2004-1-solar ponds, ömer büyükkidik, a. ceylan serhadoðlu, 2004-1 e outras Notas de estudo em PDF para Engenharia Química, somente na Docsity! SOLAR PONDS SUBMITTED BY A. CEYLAN SERHADOGLU AND ÖMER BÜYÜKKIDIK SUBMITTED TO PROF. DR. AHMET ECEVIT PHYS.471 SOLAR ENERGY FALL 2004 OUTLINE • 1. INTRODUCTION • 2. WHAT A SOLAR POND IS – 2.1 WORKING PRINCIPLE • 3. TYPES OF SOLAR PONDS – 3.1 NONCONVECTING – 3.2 CONVECTING • 4. APPLICATIONS • After the dramatic rise in oil prices in the 1970s, several countries began to formulate extensive research and development programmes to exploit solar energy [2]. • One way to tap solar energy is through the use of solar ponds. Solar ponds are large- scale energy collectors with integral heat storage for supplying thermal energy. It can be use for various applications, such as process heating, water desalination, refrigeration, drying and power generation [1] 2. WHAT A SOLAR POND IS • A solar pond is a body of water that collects and stores solar energy. Solar energy will warm a body of water (that is exposed to the sun), but the water loses its heat unless some method is used to trap it. Water warmed by the sun expands and rises as it becomes less dense. Once it reaches the surface, the water loses its heat to the airthrough convection, or evaporates, taking heat with it. The colder water, which is heavier, moves down to replace the warm water, creating a natural convective circulation that mixes the water and dissipates the heat. The design of solar ponds reduces either convection or evaporation in order to store the heat collected by the pond. They can operate in almost any climate [3]. • A solar pond can store solar heat much more efficiently than a body of water of the same size because the salinity gradient prevents convection currents. Solar radiation entering the pond penetrates through to the lower layer, which contains concentrated salt solution. The temperature in this layer rises since the heat it absorbs from the sunlight is unable to move upwards to the surface by convection. Solar heat is thus stored in the lower layer of the pond [4]. • A solar pond is an artificially constructed water pond in which significant temperature rises are caused in the lower regions by preventing the occurrence of convection currents. The more specific terms salt- gradient solar pond or non-convecting solar pond are also used. The solar pond, which is actually a large area solar collector is a simple technology that uses water- a pond between one to four metres deep as a working material for three main functions [6]. • Collection of radiant energy and its conversion into heat (upto 95° C) • Storage of heat • Transport of thermal energy out of the system[6]. • The solar pond possesses a thermal storage capacity spanning the seasons. The surface area of the pond affects the amount of solar energy it can collect. The bottom of the pond is generally lined with a durable plastic liner made from material such as black polythene and hypalon reinforced with nylon mesh. This dark surface at the bottom of the pond increases the absorption of solar radiation. Salts like magnesium chloride, sodium chloride or sodium nitrate are dissolved in the water, the concentration being densest at the bottom (20% to 30%) and gradually decreasing to almost zero at the top. Typically, a salt gradient solar pond consists of three zones [6]. 3. TYPES OF SOLAR PONDS • There are two main categories of solar ponds: nonconvecting ponds, which reduce heat loss by preventing convection from occurring within the pond; and convecting ponds, which reduce heat loss by hindering evaporation with a cover over the surface of the pond [2]. 3.1 CONVECTING SOLAR PONDS • A well-researched example of a convecting pond is the shallow solar pond. This pond consists of pure water enclosed in a large bag that allows convection but hinders evaporation. The bag has a blackened bottom, has foam insulation below, and two types of glazing (sheets of plastic or glass) on top. The sun heats the water in the bag during the day. At night the hot water is pumped into a large heat storage tank to minimize heat loss. Excessive heat loss when pumping the hot water to the storage tank has limited the development of shallow solar ponds [3]. • Another type of convecting pond is the deep, saltless pond. This convecting pond differs from shallow solar ponds only in that the water need not be pumped in and out of storage. Double-glazing covers deep saltless ponds. At night, or when solar energy is not available, placing insulation on top of the glazing reduces heat loss [3]. • Another type of nonconvecting pond, the membrane pond, inhibits convection by physically separating the layers with thin transparent membranes. As with salt gradient ponds, heat is removed from the bottom layer [2]. In figure 2 you can see an example of salt gradient solar pond. Fig. 2 Salt Gradient Solar Pond [7]. 4. APPLICATIONS • Salt production (for enhanced evaporation or purification of salt, that is production of ‘vacuum quality’ salt) • Aquaculture, using saline or fresh water (to grow, for example, fish or brine shrimp) • Dairy industry (for example, to preheat feed water to boilers) • Fruit and vegetable canning industry • Fruit and vegetable drying (for example, vine fruit drying) • Grain industry (for grain drying) • Water supply (for desalination) [4].  Refrigeration Refrigeration applications have a tremendous scope in a tropical country like India. Perishable products like agricultural produce and life saving drugs like vaccines can be preserved for long stretches of time in cold storage using solar pond technology in conjunction with ammonia based absorption refrigeration system [6]. 5. EXAMPLES OF SOLAR PONDS  5.1 BHUJ SOLAR POND  5.2 El PASO SOLAR POND  5.3 PYRAMID HILL SOLAR POND 5.1 BHUJ SOLAR POND • The 6000-square-metre solar pond in Bhuj, the first large-scale pond in industrial environment to cater to actual user demand, supplied totally about 15 million litres of hot water to the dairy at an average temperature of 75°C between September 1993 and April 1995 [8]. In figure 3 you can see the Bhuj solar pond. • The Bhuj solar pond was conceived as a research and development project of TERI, which took over nine years to establish, to demonstrate the feasibility of using a salt gradient pond for industrial heating [9]. • The solar pond is 100 m long and 60 m wide and has a depth of 3.5 m. The pond was then filled with water and 4000 tonnes of common salt was dissolved in it to make dense brine [1]. 5.2 EL PASO SOLAR POND • The El Paso Solar Pond project is a research, development, and demonstration project initiated by the University of Texas at El Paso in 1983. It has operated since May 1986 and has successfully shown that process heat, electricity, and fresh water can be produced in the southwestern United States using solar pond technology [10]. You can see the picture of El Paso Solar Pond in figure 4. Fig. 4 El Paso Solar Pond [10]. • Over 90 graduate and undergraduate students have been involved in the project, performing tasks ranging from construction to applied research. In addition, numerous students have done projects related to the pond, gaining valuable experience in equipment design and construction, lab techniques, problem solving, instrumentation, and documentation [10]. • The solar pond provides a unique opportunity to do research in such areas as double diffusive convection, wind/wave interaction, flow in stratified fluids, and computer modeling. In addition, the state of the art equipment on site provides an excellent opportunity for energy efficiency studies, cost analysis, system studies, heat exchanger [10]. 5.3 PYRAMID HILL SOLAR POND • A consortium of RMIT University, Geo-Eng Australia Pty Ltd and Pyramid Salt Pty Ltd has completed a project using a 3000 square metre solar pond located at the Pyramid Hill salt works in northern Victoria to capture and store solar energy using pond water which can reach up to 80°C [11]. In Figure 6 you can see the picture of this solar pond. 6. COST OF SOLAR PONDS • As technology develops, the energy needs of communities increases. This energy need is provided from different energy sources known as traditional energy sources, such as coal, fuel oils, geothermal energy, hydraulic energy, and nuclear energy. These energy sources have some disadvantages. The first three of these energy sources have limited life times. Hydraulic energy is an insufficient energy source, and nuclear energy has some unsolved environmental and safety problems. Therefore, the researchers have condensed their studies on new alternative energy sources known as renewable energy sources [13]. • These are biomass, biogas, wind energy, wave energy, hydrogen energy, and solar energy. • Solar energy among these energy sources is the most abundant and considerable research is being carried out in this area. In figure 7 you can see a table which is comparing initial costs of different water heating systems. And in figure 8 the annual maintenance and fuel expenses and, the sum of these expenses for different water heating systems (1991 prices) [14]. Fig. 7 The Initial Costs of Several Water Heating Systems(1991 prices). 7. ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES • Low investment costs per installed collection area. • Thermal storage is incorporated into the collector and is of very low cost. • Diffuse radiation (cloudy days) is fully used. • Very large surfaces can be built thus large scale energy generation is possible. • Expensive cleaning of large collector surfaces in dusty areas is avoided [15]. • Solar ponds can only be economically constructed if there is an abundance of inexpensive salt, flat land, and easy access to water. Environmental factors are also important. An example is preventing soil contamination from the brine in a solar pond. For these reasons, and because of the current availability of cheap fossil fuels, solar pond development has been limited [3]. 8. CONCLUSION • Solar ponds can be effectively used as replacements in industries that use fossil fuel to generate thermal energy. Solar ponds can be used for process heating, refrigeration, water desalination, production of magnesium chloride, bromine recovery from bittern, enhancement of salt yield in salt farms. It will be the future energy source.
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